Observations of multiple NH3 transitions in W33
Abstract
At a distance of 2.4kpc, W33 is an outstanding massive and luminous 10pc sized star forming complex containing quiescent infrared dark clouds as well as highly active infrared bright cloud cores heated by young massive stars. We report measurements of ammonia (NH3) inversion lines in the frequency range 18--26GHz, obtained with the 40" resolution of the 100 m Effelsberg telescope. We have detected the (J, K)=(1,1), (2,2), (3,3), (4,4), (5,5), (6,6), (2,1) and (3,2) transitions. There is a maser line in the (3,3) transition towards W33 Main. Brightness temperature and line shape indicate no significant variation during the last 36yr. We have determined kinetic temperatures, column densities and other physical properties of NH3 and the molecular clouds in W33. For the total-NH3 column density, we find for 40"(0.5pc) sized regions 6.0(2.1)×1014, 3.5(0.1)×1015, 3.4(0.2)×1015, 3.1(0.2)×1015, 2.8(0.2)×1015 and 2.0(0.2)×1015cm-2 at the peak positions of W33 Main, W33 A, W33 B, W33 Main1, W33 A1 and W33 B1, respectively. W33 Main has a total-NH3 fractional abundance of 1.3(0.1)×10-9 at the peak position. High values of 1.4(0.3)×10-8, 1.6(0.3)×10-8, 3.4(0.5)×10-8, 1.6(0.5)×10-8 and 4.0(1.2)×10-8 are obtained at the central positions of W33 A, W33 B, W33 Main1, W33 A1, and W33 B1. From this, we confirm the already previously proposed different evolutionary stages of the six W33 clumps and find that there is no hot core in the region approaching the extreme conditions encountered in W51-IRS2 or Sgr B2. The ortho-to-para-NH3 abundance ratios suggest that ammonia should have been formed in the gas phase or on dust grain mantles at kinetic temperatures of 20K.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.